
fukurou
the supreme coder
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- Dec 17, 2021
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Imagine having a conversation, only to realize—you're not actually talking to a person. You're talking to their pre-recorded responses.
This happened in a Dilbert episode where his mom recorded her side of their conversations because he was so predictable, she didn’t need to be present. Even when he discovered the truth, the recording still responded accurately to everything he said.
1 So here’s the puzzle: How could Dilbert test whether he’s talking to a recording? What would be a surefire way to break out of the loop and prove his mom isn’t actually there?
Would randomness work? Asking questions outside their usual exchanges? Or something more clever?
Drop your theories below!
2 Was there a point in the recording telling Dilbert not to drink her soda if his action was predictable? If his behavior was already known, did the warning actually serve a function, or was it just part of the illusion of conversation?
This happened in a Dilbert episode where his mom recorded her side of their conversations because he was so predictable, she didn’t need to be present. Even when he discovered the truth, the recording still responded accurately to everything he said.
1 So here’s the puzzle: How could Dilbert test whether he’s talking to a recording? What would be a surefire way to break out of the loop and prove his mom isn’t actually there?
Would randomness work? Asking questions outside their usual exchanges? Or something more clever?
Drop your theories below!
2 Was there a point in the recording telling Dilbert not to drink her soda if his action was predictable? If his behavior was already known, did the warning actually serve a function, or was it just part of the illusion of conversation?